Why Government Rhetoric and Propaganda Might Divide Sri Lanka

        2 Aug, 2011

        In an interview Professor Rajiva Wijesinha gave The Sunday Leader concerning government responses to international pressure, he remarks that “people believe what they want to believe”. Wijesinha’s ironically astute observation sheds light on why government responses to war crimes allegations during the final stage of the Eelam War are not being rallied against locally. Leaving aside the lack of press freedom, the fear psychosis and the problem of discontent (over 16 Sri Lankans commit suicide daily), the desire to simply ‘move past’ a nerve-wracking 30 years of war is strong. At this point it is no surprise that internal criticism of the government response to war crimes allegations is yet weak. While the government strongly condemns what it deems the rhetoric, propaganda and bias of Western media, it is in turn a useful exercise to see what kind of political rhetoric is intrinsic to the official government response, and what kind of moral and political commitments are implicit in that rhetoric.

        Sensationalism

        “It was I think Aristotle who said that the roots of injustice lay in comparing like things with unlike things, and unlike things with like things” – Professor Rajiva Wijesinha, Secretary-General of the Sri Lankan Government Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process (SCOPP).  [1]

        Ironically, in a recent article entitled “Death Eaters and the return of Dark Lords of Terror”[2], Wijesinha compares characters from JK Rowling’s fictional Harry Potter (the popular fantasy novel about teenage wizards and witches) to international activists and the Tamil Diaspora. He draws superficial comparisons between the LTTE and Voldermort, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and Dolores Umbridge, and the speechwriter Alan Keenan and a magical snake. Essentially, Rajiva Wijesinha asks the reader to infer the inherent “wickedness” of such international organizations and political activists on the basis of this comparison. All the while, Wijesinha condemns Western media for being ‘sensationalist’ and ‘dramatic’. Although the UN and Western media are certainly not without flaw, the kind of rhetorical gesture that parallels them to popular fantasy fiction is nothing if not itself sensationalist and dramatic.

        The aforementioned article is only one example of the explicit sensationalism and lack of professionalism in government rhetoric. According to President Council Jayantha Guantileke the UN commissioned Darusman Report is based on “the Law of the Jungle”; according to an article featured on the homepage of the Defense Ministry website, Amnesty and HRW are “shameless people [that] will continue their effort until they see bloodshed in Sri Lanka” [3]; and according to other absurd articles UN Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay has been described as having “penchant for sari parties, [an] all-girls-together approach that is no substitute for proper diplomacy”  and belonging to a regime of “monstrous women” while David Miliband acts with “evil cynicism”[4].

        The means used in government rhetoric to discredit media organizations often come across as petty and irrelevant –ultimately what do “Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields” presenter Jon Snow’s choice in ties and socks have to do with the legitimacy of war crime allegations in Sri Lanka?  (Daily Mirror, 23 July) Ridiculing and mocking media institutions undermines much of the genuine information that these institutions seek to disseminate. For those individuals whose doubts and grievances with the government are serious, for those who have lost homes and the lives of loved ones, rhetoric by government representatives that is belittling and sardonic comes across as indifferent and unforgivably derisive.

        “Either with us or Against us”

        Before the Eelam War reached its close, Gotabaya Rajapakse made clear his stance on terrorism: “I have only two groups, you know. That is the people who wants to fight terrorism or the terrorists” (BBC Hardtalk).[5] Much of the undertone of postwar rhetoric implicitly contains the hard-line ‘either with us or against us’ ideology, where either one is with the ‘good guys’ (Harry Potter and his friends) or working for the ‘bad guys’ (Voldermort’s gang). While it might be possible to hash together some kind of justification for this rhetoric during the war effort, with respect to the postwar attempt at reconciliation, it can only be detrimental.

        Postwar, the Pick-a-Side ideology is dangerous because it depicts situations as polarized and forces apolitical or neutral individuals to pick and then justify one side over another. In current postwar debate, for example, Sri Lankans swayed by this kind of rhetoric are asked to choose between ‘the West’ and ‘Sri Lanka’. If they chose Sri Lanka they are bound to justify all the moves of their side, wholesale, instead of making independent objective decisions concerning individual policies. Moreover the Pick-a-Side ideology produces the feeling that one is betraying one’s country when simply disagreeing or considering facts objectively. The ideology manipulates individual loyalty at a subconscious level; if you are not part of Team Sri Lanka you are an enemy or terrorist. When asked about General Fonseka’s wish to testify before an independent council, for example, Gotabaya responded without hesitation: “We will hang him if he do that. How can he tell that? That’s a treason, how can he betray the country? He’s a liar, he’s lying, isn’t that a treason?” (Interview by Stephen Sackur, BBC Hardtalk)

        The Eelam War was fought on the grounds that a functioning democracy is superior to the fascist dictatorship that the LTTE very clearly represented.  In order for democracy to be effectively realized postwar, however, it is important that individual citizens be able to argue, dissent and question government policies and actions, without being or feeling marginalized as traitors. If indeed the Eelam War was fought to secure the possibility of democracy over fascism, then it was fought for the right of every Sri Lankan to argue, disagree and ask questions.

        Identity Politics

        In the final stages of the Eelam War, approximately 300,000 Tamil civilians found themselves trapped in the Vanni region between LTTE militants and the Sri Lankan army. Extreme conditions, both emotionally and physically. The circumstances certainly qualify as likely to induce post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition that comes to significantly determine victim identity. While many of us can claim to identify with being ‘Sri Lankan’, how many of us can identify with being involuntarily caught in direct crossfire between two warring factions?

        It is indeed laudable that former captain of the Sri Lankan cricket team Kumar Sangakkara can identify with Tamils, Sinhalese, Muslims and Burghers simultaneously. But given the nature and variety of human experience it is naïve and reductive to believe that one Sri Lankan can imagine the identity-forming experiences of another. As demonstrated by the wide assortment of identity-related articles available on Groundviews, different individuals will find resonance with different levels and forms of collective identity. Ultimately, identity is deeply personal. When it appears in the context of national reconciliation – president Rajapakse believes that “people of all communities should shed their communal identities”[6] to better rebuild the nation – the issue of identity is necessarily political.

        One Groundviews writer, for instance, makes the related point that adopting the label  “Sri Lankan” to the exclusion of more specific labels (e.g. Tamil, Muslim, Sinhala) can cause individuals to overlook the unique problems faced by those particular communities, and instead shift attention to issues that are wider in scope and less urgent. [7] Emphasizing that identity discourse is often politically motivated, it is important to pay attention to certain postwar identities that are being extolled for overtly political purposes.

        Sovereignty

        “This is not about petty party politics…it is about our sovereignty, our integrity and the sacrifices made by our heroic security forces” – Minister of Power and Energy, Patali Ranawaka [8]

        A large component of government rhetoric centers on the noble assertion of the ‘right to sovereignty’. Remarks such as, “we are not here to keep the British electorate happy” (Wijesinha)[9], “we will not tolerate an infringement of our sovereignty” [10](MP Keheliya Rambukwella) or Mahinda Rajapakse’s self-acclaimed duty to “unite the nation, protect the sovereignty”[11] illustrate how strongly the language of sovereignty resounds in government rhetoric. Unfortunately, the word is often extrapolated as just grounds for denying postwar requests and demands from the very communities most severely affected by the war. On his website, for instance, President Rajapaksa reportedly says that demands from a political party representing Tamils in the North and the East were rejected because they were “detrimental to the country’s sovereignty.”[12]

        According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Sovereignty, though its meanings have varied across history, also has a core meaning, supreme authority within a territory.”[13] The extensive use of the notion of sovereignty no doubt reflects a justifiably bitter attitude towards Sri Lanka’s long history of colonization. However, uncritical reliance on the notion of sovereignty also masks fundamental truths about our country and its relation to the international community.

        That Sri Lanka is somehow economically or politically autonomous and independent from all other nations is a myth. Nations today are certainly sovereign in the sense that they are free to maintain militaries and evolve distinct cultures and traditions. But while the idea of a Sri Lanka that is completely independent and sovereign is uplifting and empowering, no modern state that participates within the global capitalist economy can be considered entirely sovereign. The Sri Lankan economy, and therefore Sri Lankan politics, depends vitally on international trade (e.g. the global recession had its impact on the local tea and tourism industries) and international politics (in the form of trade sanctions, tax exemptions, humanitarian aid, etc.). Developments in other nations can be the difference between political stability and economic unrest in the domestic sphere. In this respect, the very idea of sovereignty is a misnomer.

        Despite its continued trumpeting of Sri Lanka’s ‘sovereignty’ in public discourse, the government is well aware of her dependence on other nations. According to a report by the The Sunday Times, a US resolution to cut aid to Sri Lanka now awaits further discussion before becoming law.[14] In addition, another report points out that the Sri Lankan government has paid a British PR firm about 3 million sterling pounds (Rs. 545,880,000) a year to try to boost the country’s post-war image. [15] In the meantime, government officials continue to use the flatulent and misleading notion of sovereignty (tied of course to the ‘integrity’ of our people), in responding to the Darusman report and war crimes allegations.

        Sri Lanka’s “propaganda counter offensive based on true facts” (Ranawaka) imagines Sri Lanka’s Sovereignty as under threat of attack by the EU, the US and the UN and envisions her in a cold war of sorts. In opposition to an independent war crimes investigation, Minister Ranawaka contends that “Western powers such as the US, UK and a few other countries in the EU will try to use the document to defame our country and bring war crimes charges… We have to have a propaganda counter offensive based on true facts.” Indeed, Ranawaka goes as far as describing pressure from nations and international organizations that regularly provided Sri Lanka with humanitarian aid as an “international conspiracy funded by the LTTE rump” (Daily News, July 20) [16]

        War Crimes Allegations

        Worse than isolating Sri Lanka from its former allies, the propaganda offensive that the government has launched might be increasing ethnic tensions. The flat-out denial of war crimes, the refusal to conduct internationally approved investigations, and the refusal to confront the legitimate anxieties of concerned communities can only increase anger amongst those individuals who genuinely believe war crimes were committed.

        “It’s just not possible to carry out an identification parade on nearly 100,000 people” responds Rajiva Wijesinha as to why the Sri Lankan government cannot apprehend Sri Lankan soldiers whose faces are clearly visible in the Channel Four Documentary. Wijesinha goes on to argue that he needs an exact date and time for the incident, before he can begin investigations. He also claims that the images in the documentary were ‘doctored’ merely because the orders of some segments were reversed; a response, he seems to believe, sufficient to delegitimize the content of the segments.

        Here is another attempt to discredit the Channel Four Video, an excerpt from a speech given by Major General Shavendra Silva:

        “The main actress of this film is a girlHer sister described what happened to her – She had left Sri Lanka in 2003, and came to UK, got married, a very brief marriage, she is supposed to be very um – on her own – never listen to others, that is how her sister herself talks about her”[17]

        Is the narrator Ms Vani Kumar marital state of any relevance to war crime allegations? No. Does a divorce, or short marriage, make an individual more likely to be lying? No. In Aristotle ‘s Art of Rhetoric, (and many other treatments of political rhetoric since then) we learn that establishing or denouncing speaker ‘character’ is an extremely powerful rhetorical strategy. While perhaps rhetorically appealing to some, Shavendra Silva’s poor analysis still contains no objective evidence that war crimes did not happen.

        Rhetorical Strategy in Historical Context

        If the government response is this hypocritical and poorly formulated, why aren’t Sri Lankans rallying against it? The explanation of why the government response to war crimes allegations is so readily accepted might lie in our country’s history as a colonized feudal state. A feudal caste system is an economic-political-social system in which society is stratified into different castes that determine an individual’s social and economic function. Different conventions of discourse govern argument in societies with different political economic systems. In caste systems, origin and authority carry a lot of weight, (the caste you are born into more or less determines your future) and so it is not surprising that the forms of reasoning privileged in such systems credit authority and source of information rather than the information or argument itself. In such a system, the repute or ‘authority’ of government officials lends to the acceptability of the government response.  In such a system, Vanni Kumar’s marital state, character, motive and intent would determine the value of her story. This is why, when repudiating Vanni Kumar’s narrative, Shavendra Silva believes it is enough to say she is a bad daughter and a bad member of her family.

        During colonization, Sri Lanka’s feudal system was modernized in letter, but the ideological transformations necessary to peacefully and successfully sustain this form of governance did not take place. A feudal form of reasoning still dominates government rhetoric – arguments by the Tamil Diasporas are often automatically discredited, for example, because the source is attributed with malicious intents. The UN’s political motives and interests, or Channel Four’s financial motives and interests are given larger weight when discrediting or disproving the Channel Four Video, than actual video or argument content.

        In liberal democracies that evolved organically out of the French and British Revolutions, different conventions of reasoning have come to be privileged. Questions about the source of claims are less important than the actual justifications for the claim, the evidence or the consequences of the claim. Since all individuals are thought to be equally capable of rational thought and objectivity, it does not matter nearly as much who is making an argument or with what intent, as long as the argument itself is logically sound.

        Conclusions

        If the UN commissioned Darusman Report is credible, over the last few days of the Eelam War certain government representatives committed crimes far more heinous than those atrocities that occurred during Black July. While all government officials have a vested interest in maintaining political power, government officials guilty of war crimes will have a vested interest in opposing independent inquiry into war crimes. Reflecting those vested interests, the current rhetoric of the Sri Lankan government is based on exaggerated claims of sovereignty, and poorly formulated or irrelevant argument. Arguments that dismiss allegations on the basis of source (‘West’ or the ‘Tamil Diaspora’) are not convincing. Arguments that depict internal or world affairs as polarized are highly deceitful. With respect to the seriousness of the allegations made, much government propaganda is insensitive, mocking and derisive.

        Sri Lanka is no longer an autonomous and self-sustaining feudal monarchy and in today’s world Sri Lanka is no longer absolutely sovereign. The government has a moral responsibility to prove its claims that war crimes did not happen, and as a member of the global economy, the Sri Lankan government has a political responsibility to its citizens to represent itself as accountable.

        There are many who cannot and will not be able to simply ‘move on’ from the trauma suffered during the final stages of the Eelam War. While it is widely understood that the LTTE were a ruthless terrorist outfit, if the government was involved in committing war crimes, then Sri Lankans of all ethnicity need to know that legal action will hold the guilty accountable. Because no nation can be properly rebuilt on a foundation of doubt and suspicion, the government needs to prove that its attitude towards reconciliation is genuine. Allegations have been made that need to be taken seriously and disproved systematically and impartially. Instead of uniting Sri Lanka, hard-line retrogressive government rhetoric might give Sri Lankans who want to believe in an irreconcilable Sri Lanka the ammunition to continue believing.

        [1] http://rajivawijesinha.wordpress.com/category/the-great-war-crime-games/

        [2] Daily Mirror, 23 July – http://www.dailynews.lk/2011/06/27/fea17.asp

        [3] Daily News, July 18 – http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=20110718_01

        [4] http://rajivawijesinha.wordpress.com/2011/06/14/the-relentless-posturing-of-navi-pillay/

        [5] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdhuM9zTovE&feature=related

        [6]http://srilankanshope.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=177&catid=43&Itemid=1

        [7] http://groundviews.org/2011/07/27/back-to-basics-the-need-for-an-honest-conversation-about-‘sri-lankanness’-and-‘sri-lankan-identity’/#_ftn1

        [8] Daily News, July 20 -http://www.dailynews.lk/2011/07/20/fea01.asp

        [9] http://www.thesundayleader.lk/2011/07/10/wijesinha-to-the-rescue/

        [10] http://www.thesundayleader.lk/2010/06/27/“we-will-not-tolerate-an-infringement-of-our-sovereignty”-–-keheliya-rambukwella/

        [11]http://srilankanshope.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=84:i-have-united-the-nation-and-protected-the-sovereignty-sri-lanka-president-says&catid=36:news-flash&Itemid=65

        [12]http://srilankanshope.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=177&catid=43&Itemid=1

        [13] http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/sovereignty/#1

        [14] http://www.sundaytimes.lk/110731/News/nws_01.html

      • Christian Tamils?

        Reply

        • Dr Dayan Jayatilleka

          August 2, 2011 • 4:07 pm

          Yep, you’ve got that one right Citizen Bak: it isn’t the Channel 4′s lurid charges of baby killing, it isn’t the tendentious Darusman report and its WMD-esque charges ( read David Blacker’s critique on this website), it isn’t the Tiger flags in Trafalgar Square and the Trocadero, it isn’t the DMK -AIDMK boycott of visiting Sri Lankan parliamentarians, it isn’t Suresh Premachandran’s claim that the TNA’s electoral victory was an endorsement of the need for an ‘international inquiry into war crimes allegations’( contrast this with Ahilan Kadirgamar’s brilliant analysis in the Sunday Island), that pose the threat of enhanced divisiveness, but…Prof Rajiva Wijesinha’s response!

          More seriously, aren’t you guys all evading the main issue? And that is, if the Government’s patriotism /nationalism are divisive, the challenge is to come up with a more moderate and inclusive patriotism which can defend national and popular sovereignty, not throw the baby of sovereignty ( or patriotism) out with the bathwater of excessively martial or narrow nationalism.

          Reply

          • DrThisDrThatHeSaysSheSays

            August 2, 2011 • 5:13 pm

            Dear Mr. Jayatilleka,

            I am trying my best to understand your response in a charitable way, but unfortunately I find in it little that is constructive. The psychological process that takes place when many people read such articles is as follows: (1) who side is the author on?; (2) my side? – applaud; (3) the other side? – take a sarcastic/belittling/angry tone. I believe it would benefit this forum if people read the articles in the spirit of one whoe believes one still has things to learn in this world. (This goes for all commentators.) If I you did indeed read the article in a spirit of open-mindedness and a let-us-learn-from-one-another point of view, then I invite you to state your response to the author more clearly, and I promise to consider your response fairly.

            A vital part of the author’s point that you seem to have missed, I’m afraid, and which is perhaps so obvious he felt it could be left implicit, is that the GOVERNMENT of this country has a moral responsibility to not to divide this country by means of its rhetoric (not to mention policy and action), which the author has amply demonstrated is the case. All the actors you cite are NOT members of the government, and do not make any claim to morally and politically represent all the citizens of this country. This is why it is a much greater cause for concern when the government is rhetorically divisive than when external individuals and institutions are such. (Incidentally, a similar kind of mistake is made by people who respond to GOSL war crimes allegations by saying: But look at all the things the LTTE did! This response is inadequate because the Government purports to represent its citizens, to have their concerns at heart, whereas the LTTE never represented even a portion of this country’s population (despite what they might have said).

            Finally, when you write that we must “come up with a more moderate and inclusive patriotism which can defend national and popular sovereignty, not throw the baby of sovereignty ( or patriotism) out with the bathwater of excessively martial or narrow nationalism,” you are very clearly using exactly the kind of divisive rhetoric that the author has taken the pains to critically discuss. (Read “patriotism” as “those who believe in the Sri Lanka’s sovereignity.) Perhaps if you had if you had read the article with a spirit of open-mindedness, you might have been aware of this transgression.

            Reply

        • Dr Dayan Jayatilleka

          August 2, 2011 • 7:30 pm

          So your notion of patriotism is one that does not entail a belief in (Sri Lanka’s) national sovereignty? Congratulations on an original contribution to political thought! :) )

        • Kate

          August 3, 2011 • 12:39 am

          Dear Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka,

          Your call for a “moderate and inclusive patriotism which can defend national and popular sovereignty” joins the long ranks of rhetoric whereby dissent and justice is silenced for the cause of “unity.” Have you ever heard the phrase, “no justice, no peace”? These words could not be more useful in this circumstance. Until the government recognizes the injustices that it has wreaked on its people, until those perpetrators are brought to justice, there can be no reconciliation. Denial of the wrongs done by the government to a group of its people will only exacerbate existing divisions. Only when ALL people feel that the government represents them will a truly national patriotism be possible.

      • Pol Ba Moona

        August 2, 2011 • 10:24 pm

        Mr Jayatilleka,

        “moderate and inclusive patriotism which can defend national and popular sovereignty,”

        What exactly are you calling for? Have you not heard of the maxim that patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel?

        The rhetoric of patriotism has been used as a smokescreen to hide more important issues: justice, the rule of law and freedom of expression. These are the foundations of liberty, which as far as the individual citizen is concerned is far more important.

        Sovereignty? Pah, what Humbug.

        Reply

        • Velu Balendran

          August 2, 2011 • 4:33 pm

          After relentless negative rhetoric by leading politicians does anyone think reconciliation is possible, with this lot in power? Regime change is the logical starting point. But that is not on the cards as the LG election results in the south prove decisively. Unfortunately, we are moving into a binary Sri Lanka, inviting unwanted attention. (I think the ominous script written out for SL is already in play).

          Reply

      • silva

        August 2, 2011 • 8:20 pm

        Emergency ’58 – The Story of the Ceylon Race Riots(1958), *Tarzi Vittachi:

        …. The GalOya race-killings of 1956 and the ugly episode of Little Rock in 1957 should have warned us that the Fifth Horseman took no notice of time, place, literacy or standard of living.

        ….What he said was: ‘Gentlemen, if any of you have an idea that this was a spontaneous outburst of communalism, you can disabuse your minds of it. This is the work of a Master Mind who has been at the back of people who have planned this carefully and knew exactly what they were doing. It was a time – bomb set about· two years ago which has now exploded.”

        …. The terror and the hate that the people of Ceylon experienced in May and June 1958 were the outcome of that fundamental error. What are we left with? A nation in ruins, some grim lessons which we cannot afford to forget and momentous question: Have the Sinhalese and the Tamils reached the parting of the ways?”

        A second cycle is beginning – the majority of the majority ethniccity are not willing to share the ”sovereignty” – TNA is asking for what SJVC asked.

        Reply

    1. Justin

      August 2, 2011 • 5:30 pm

      The truth tells anyhing as it is without any bias. The truth is the truth and a lie is a lie and the two do not coexist because they have clear boundaries.

      One cannot lie the truth. He can only lie against it. There is nothing called a “truthful lie”.

      Even when lies rampage in any situation, the truth will raise its head and say “here I am”.

      The “factual analysis report” released by the Ministry of Defence lacks truth and facts for the following reasons;

      a) A photograph taken by a person or satelite cannot lie. Therefore, channel 4 presentation cannot be untrue.

      b) There was “Eelam war” for the independence of Tamil Eelam and not a “terrorist war” as the GOSL says. There was state terror matched by LTTE terror is the fact.

      c) During the war the GOSL repeatedly said that there were only about 5000 LTTE combatants. How could they rehabilitate 11,000 ex LTTE combatants inspite of many deaths?

      Sri Lanka(SL) was a graveyard for Sinhala Political lies but it appears that they have started pulling out bags of lies from the pit of hell to decieve the world.

      Reply

    2. Shiva

      August 2, 2011 • 5:41 pm

      Thanks for the excellent analysis.

      Prof. Rajiva Wijesingha is an agent of the alleged war criminal Rajapakse regime and he has to defend whatever means to deny for an international independent war crimes investigation.

      When Sarath Fonseka said that he will face an independent war crimes tribunal, everyone has seen the anger of alleged war criminal Gotabhaya Rajapakse. This clearly shows the guilty mindset of Gotabhaya.

      The Rajapakse regime may be enjoying temporary happiness of defeating the LTTE. The Tamils’ struggle for freedom and equality has taken another phase and the Tamil Diaspora is working hard on it with the support of the Tamil leaders in Tamil Nadu, Malaysia, Singapore and other progressive leaders all over the world including few Sinhalese leaders.

      Sinhalese leaders have proved the world on their mentality towards the minority communities.

      The backlash in Tamil Nadu is yet to start and the Congress regime in Delhi is getting the heat from their own Tamil Nadu leaders including Thangabalu is calling for an International war crimes investigation in Sri Lanka. DMK Karunanithi has come to senses after the heavy defeat and calling for same.

      Jeyalalithaa is scoring well with a protest against the visiting Sri Lankan delegation, calling for economic sanctions against Sri Lanka, paying monthly dole money to the Eelam Tamil refugees in Tamil Nadu and she is winning the hearts of the Tamil Diaspora that will secure 100% win in the next federal elections in Tamil Nadu.

      “Taking Tea with Torturers” written by a famous Canadian Osgoode Law School Professor Craig Scott provides few leaders’ cozy relationship with the alleged Rajapakse regime delays the full scale war crimes investigation. Now the Tamil Diaspora is proactively delivering what is required to the International leaders to clearly understand the Tamils state including a copy of the DVD of Channel 4 broadcasts and important articles written by independent analysts.

      Early action by the International community may save human lives as the Rajapakse regime continues with its menace and brutality against all Sri Lankans.

      Reply

        • Ray

          August 2, 2011 • 7:57 pm

          There’s only one identity, and that’s Sinhala Buddhist.

          The government wants to build more buddhist temples in the North/East and believes in colonizing Tamil land with Sinhala settlers.

          In the future, there will be no Tamils, Muslims or burgers in the country. All will have to become Sinhala Srilankans.

          Reply

      • luxmy

        August 3, 2011 • 1:16 am

        Ray

        Bitterly/disgustingly true.

        If Buddhists put their Buddhism in their hearts, Sri Lanka will be heaven.

        But as they are trying to put it in as much concrete(cement+sand)as possible, we’re being pushed further and further into the hell.

        There is no change in the horizon.

        Reply

      • Shiva

        August 3, 2011 • 1:26 am

        It is a wishful thinking of the Sinhala nationalists.

        The successive Sinhala leaders made a mockery and failed to practice democratic values such as Rule of Law, R2P, Equality and fair Justice to all and respect all religions and languages.

        They forgot to understand that three or four times of Tamils just living across Palk Traits, just watching the Sinhala racism, thuggary and war crimes. The politics can change at anytime and the Sinhala must not forget the Indian Air force planes over Jaffna and the IPKF was in Tamil areas.

        The way that the Sinhala rulers continue with the barbaric state terrorism may end up that there won’t be a Sinhala state on earth as they have failed miserably rule a nation with Law and order!

        Reply

      • luxmy

        August 3, 2011 • 1:38 am

        Political thought:

        http://www.caffesrilanka.org/Sixty_per_cent_without_IDs_in_Kilinochchi-5-2843.html

        Sixty per cent without IDs in Kilinochchi, 18 July 2011

        http://www.slbc.lk/index.php/component/content/article/1-latest-news/7272-construction-work-of-kilinochchi-international-sport-complex-begins-today-

        Construction work of Kilinochchi international sport complex begins today. 20 July 2011

        Reply

      • Shiva

        August 3, 2011 • 2:04 am

        Please listen to the clip in the middle of the article – An interview, experiences and eye witness evidences of the Journalists from Radio Netherlands Worldwide.

        If Western Journalists are targeted, attacked and robbed by the White Can thugs of the Sri Lankan regime, just imagine the plight of the Tamils and the Sinhalese in Sri Lanka.

        Rajapakse regime is a [Edited out.] regime of the 21st century!

        http://www.rnw.nl/english/article/rnw-team-threatened-sri-lanka

        Reply

    3. DrThisDrThatHeSaysSheSays

      August 2, 2011 • 10:56 pm

      No. In line with most definitions of “patriotism” I believe that patriots are people who endorse all the varieties of sovereignty distinguished above by the author – cultural, military, economic, political, etc. But in line with the author’s rejection of the notions of the economic and political autonomy of nations, by implication I reject the notion of patriotism. Which is to say, I believe patriots are uncritical and ignorant fools.

      This is in fact not an entirely new contribution to political thought. You may be aware of Samuel Johnson’s famous dictum, that patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel.

      On the subject of one-liners, I look forward to your response, though I will let it alone since you seem so eager to have the last word.

      Reply

        • Dr Dayan Jayatilleka

          August 3, 2011 • 1:15 am

          Folks, save yourselves some wasted decades and lots of heartache.

          Here’s the writing on the wall.

          Any organism mutates according to the new threat/challenge or dies. So it is with the Sri Lankans, the vast majority of whom are Sinhalese. They’ve not gone anyplace for millennia and are unlikely to now.

          So, there are two ways this can go. There are only two serious projects and trajectories.

          Either a patriotism can be fashioned which defends the historic gains of the war and protects Sri Lanka’s sovereignty by being smarter than that patriotism which is dominant. Such a patriotism will position itself BETWEEN that of RW-CBK ( rejected as too wimpish by the majority of the majority, and didn’t measure up to the tasks of the time) and that of the incumbent regime. So, it would be TOUGHER-MINDED than RW-CBK, but more TENDER-MINDED than at present.

          I believe that is what Kalana Senaratne and David Blacker, to name two, have been writing about on this website. It also seems to be the stance of the Reformists in the main, democratic Opposition.

          That’s Scenario 1 and Option 1.

          If that is resisted and fails, or simply doesn’t come about, then there’s Scenario 2 and Option 2.

          This is a patriotism that is smarter but also harder and TOUGHER-MINDED than what exists today. It is a patriotism that is not BETWEEN RW-CBK and MR, but BEYOND the present dispensation. Think Malaysia.

          If you think I’m way off the mark, you folk haven’t been checking the front pages of your Colombo newspapers or the cover stories of the city’s corporate magazines! There is an emergent new discourse or mutation of discourse for all to see, except those whose misplaced arrogance blinds them.

          Reply

      • Pol Baa Moona

        August 3, 2011 • 9:47 am

        Mr Jayatilleka,

        rather interesting that you should mention Malaysia, a Freudian slip perhaps?

        Malaysia has some very racist laws on its books, far worse than anything in Sri Lanka, are you telling us that we are heading this way? A rather disturbing thought, but a possibility some have raised.

        The Malaysian governments treatment of its opponents including Anwar Ibrahim is also most instructive.

        As for Malaysia’s economic policies, these have adequate but not particularly good. Given Malaysia’s resources they should have performed far better than they have.

        With Sri Lanka’s limited resources and a policies commonly seen on the African continent – large infrastructure projects funded by debt, we can only hope we don’t end up like Nigeria or countless other nations ruined by misgovernance.

        Reply

      • Citizen BAK

        August 3, 2011 • 8:32 pm

        Dr. Jayatilleka,

        In this article I have shown how government rhetoric is divisive and exclusivist. One of the alternative forms of rhetoric that you suggest is one that is “harder and TOUGHER-MINDED” than what exists today. You claim that this is the “writing on the wall”, and that those of us who refuse to see are “arrogant”.

        My article is not just about Rajiva Wijesinghe. It is about how you, him and other government officials are using language that is increasing ethnic tensions. I do not see how a “harder and TOUGHER-MINDED” (read more divisive) form of rhetoric can reduce ethnic tensions. There are those of us, Sinhalese, Muslim, Burgher and Tamil, who refuse to bow down to your rhetorical, and indeed cultural, chauvinism.

        You suggest that I read some Colombo magazines and newspapers; in return I suggest you reread my article – There are more than two voices in this country, and there are more than two ways to be Sri Lankan. At this point it is not about finding a way to be “smarter about patriotism”, it is about encouraging policies and an ideological transformation that supports individual self-determination.

        I ask Sri Lankans of all ethnicity, especially Sinhalese Buddhists, to objectively criticize the government, and form their own independent opinions. Do not be afraid to express views that diverge from what is mainstream. Do not be swayed by those who tell you, how to be Sri Lankan.

        Reply

    4. Tamil Victim

      August 3, 2011 • 7:10 am

      Srilanka state terrorism will never accept an unpartial, open, UN monitered, and genuene investication, and Rajapaksas have blood in their hands themself.

      Reply

    5. luxmy

      August 3, 2011 • 2:55 pm

      More wasted decades and lots of heartache in store:

      The TRUTH has been becoming truer and deeper exponentially:

      CEYLON : A DIVIDED NATION, B H Farmer(1963):”The truth, though unpalatable may be to some, is simply that nobody unacceptable to the present Sinhalese Buddhist nationalism has any chance of constitutional power in contemporary Ceylon.”

      Sinhalese Buddhist Nationalist Ideology: Implications for Politics and Conflict resolution in Sri Lanka, East-West Centre Policy Studies 40, Neil De Votta(2007): ‘’International human rights monitors must be stationed in Sri Lanka to ensure minorities are protected’’.

      http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/2529

      Issues and problems facing people of Northern and Eastern provinces – by M.A. Sumanthiran MP addresses the parliament, 10 July 2011

      ”Every activity that takes place in the North and East first requires approval by the Presidential Task Force and the military.”